As human greed continues to plunder and prey on the wilderness and naturalness in Western Australia (WA), and other parts of Australia/Pacifica, the Great Intelligences in Nature will occasionally respond with wild weather, to include weather underground such as earthquakes.

In the Christian Hebrew year of 2012, human piggery continued almost unabated in its piggish plunder, and thereby arrived many fierce storm fronts, increased shark attacks and local Australian (“Aboriginal”) reprisals against the Invaders’ destruction of Land and Sea.

In Perth (a European name for a large human city in southwest WA) there were tornado visits and a storm front equivalent to a category 2 cyclone. This same ferocity, demonstrated by Nature, has also appeared in recent previous years.

We urge all caring and responsible People, Invaders or otherwise, to take note of Nature’s defence against the human offence, and to cease and desist in all human piggery and human plunder, lest Nature take drastic determined action to prohibitively banish humanism from Western Australia, and other parts of Australia.

The following are News’ clips from the human News’ website(s) in Australia regarding the weather warnings:

“It was really windy. I looked out the windows and there was just stuff flying in the sky,” he said.

“Then we were just standing at the window having a look and the roof just started going boom, boom, boom with the wind, so we just ran to the back of the store and as we were running the windows just smashed in.”

Electrician James Stevenson was in the Galleria Shopping Centre car park in Morley when the storm hit.

“It went across the top of the shopping centre, ripping all the shade sails off, smashing them on to cars and there was power lines down in the street with wires across the road,” he said.

Another witness, Shelby Ginger, had just arrived to pick her children up from school.

“So we got out of the car to walk towards the school and all of a sudden it just bared down and started,” she said.

“Everything was flying towards us so we jumped under a tree and saw it go down the road ripping trees up – just scary.”

Powerful gusts of wind and rain also lashed the town of York from about 12:30pm (AWST) but there were no reports of injuries or damage to homes.

Neil Bennett from the Bureau of Meteorology says the tornado struck without warning.

“The unfortunate nature of these things; they live fast and die young,” he said.

“We don’t really have the ability to predict exactly where they’re going to occur.

“We can predict an area where we think they may occur but the actual pinpointing of them is next to impossible.

Storm Warning Adds to WA Residents’ Misery

Residents in Western Australia’s south-west are preparing for another violent storm after wild weather ripped through homes, buildings and cars yesterday and left thousands of people without power.

Emergency services are still cleaning up after what is being called the most destructive storm in years, and the weather bureau is now warning of more wild weather over the south-west half of the state in the next 48 hours.

Most of the south-west land division is expected to be affected by wind gusts of up to 125 kilometres per hour, the equivalent of a category 2 cyclone.

Yesterday’s strong winds affected Perth, along with virtually all communities between Geraldton in the north and Ravensthorpe in the south.

“I’m comparing it to probably 17 years ago when we saw a major impact on the metropolitan area where we had power outages for four and five days,” Fire and Emergency Services spokesman Allen Gale said.

“This one’s different – this one’s been widespread – right through the south-west corner. It has gone well inland but most of the impact has [been] caused on the coast, and it’s affected predominantly trees and power lines.”

He says authorities have received most calls for help from the Mandurah-Rockingham, as well as Bunbury and the hinterland area around it.

“It has torn roofs off some buildings, it’s taken roofs off a major apartment block in Tuart Hill. Ten occupants and their families all have to find somewhere else to live for the time being,” he said.

“We’ve heard of boats losing their moorings, being washed out to sea. We’ve seen boats washed up on shores.

“A lot of erosion on the coast, jetties torn away. So the damage is quite widespread.”

Lines down

More than 160,000 homes were without power after the storm hit yesterday, and some residents could be waiting for days until power is restored.

Western Power says it is impossible to estimate when electricity supplies will be restored to all homes and businesses.

More than 60,000 homes and businesses across the southern half of the state remain without power.

Western Power acting CEO, Paul Italiano, says it will take a couple of weeks to fix all of the damage.

“The damage is extensive, it runs all the way from Geraldton through to Ravensthorpe – that’s one of the biggest areas that we’ve ever had in a single event,” Mr Italiano said.

Repair crews will also have to contend with further strong winds.

“We are expecting that it could get quite windy tomorrow night as well as another low approaches,” Bureau of Meteorology forecaster John Grimes said.

“On Tuesday night we are likely to see a system much windier than normal hit the west coast, south of Kalbarri.

Storm Cyclonic Winds to Hit WA

Residents in the southern half of Western Australia are being warned to brace themselves for cyclonic winds which are due to hit the state late this afternoon.

Towns from Geraldton to Esperance, and the city of Perth, are still cleaning up from extensive damaged caused by cyclonic winds on Sunday, and tens of thousand of homes are still without power.

Later today most of the south-west land division is expected to be affected by wind gusts of up to 125 kilometres per hour, the equivalent of a category 2 cyclone.

More than 160,000 homes were left without power and some residents could be waiting for days until power is restored.

Western Power says 18,000 customers are still affected by blackouts, with Donnybrook, Pinjarra, Kewdale and Boddington the hardest hit.

The utility’s acting CEO Paul Italiano says it will take a couple of weeks to repair the network.

“The damage is extensive, it runs all the way from Geraldton through to Ravensthorpe – that’s one of the biggest areas that we’ve ever had in a single event,” he said.

The outages have also hit phone and internet services after power was cut to service towers.

Telstra says thousands of customers cannot use landlines, mobile phones, the internet or EFTPOS machines, with the worst hit areas in Brookhampton, Donnybrook, Capel and Boyanup where exchanges are down.

The Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s James Pearson says WA businesses are still counting the costs of the storm.

“For every hour, every day the business is without power that comes straight off the bottom line,” he said.

“A range of industries have been affected including in the agricultural sector, for example the dairy industry, and businesses that rely a lot on refrigeration of products or electricity to operate machinery.”

Changing conditions

The Australian Navy is assisting in the clean-up south of Perth.

Sailors and officers from HMAS Stirling are helping State Emergency Service volunteers clear debris in Rockingham and Mandurah, and prepare for another storm tonight.

Commanding Officer, Captain Brett Wolski, says they have several days work ahead of them.

“There are some areas which are priority such as securing porches and patios of people’s houses, that type of thing, to prevent any further damage,” he said.

“That’s the important thing to do now and there will be more cleaning up in the next couple of days.”

At least 30 state schools will be closed today.

The Education Department says schools damaged by Sunday’s storm will remain closed, while some students in the South West will be sent home at 1:00 pm this afternoon in anticipation of severe weather.

Department spokesman David Mitchell says safety is a priority.

“We don’t want to take any risks with students and staffs’ safety,” he said.

“As we say, there are some schools where there has been some damage that has led obviously to some safety concerns in some cases, some schools also don’t have power or water.”

The Albany Port has now re-opened after being closed due to the poor weather.

Its chief executive Brad Williamson says a number of grain ships have been affected.

One ship waiting out to sea had to return to port after dragging its anchor in the stormy conditions.

“The ship that was dragging its anchor was intending to load 33,000 tonnes of oats to take to Mexico,” he said.

“On Tuesday night we are likely to see a system much windier than normal hit the west coast, south of Kalbarri,” Bureau of Meteorology forecaster John Grimes said.

Residents warned to prepare for intense storm

Authorities are warning residents in the southern half of Western Australia to make preparations before an intense storm hits later today.

The State Emergency Services says very dangerous weather, similar to the storm which wreaked widespread damage on the weekend, will batter the south coast, the South West, Perth and north to Geraldton.

It will also extend inland to Laverton in the Goldfields.

Wind gusts in excess of 125 kilometres an hour are forecast.

Duty forecaster Carolyn Crow says the deep low pressure system off the south of the state will cross the coast this afternoon.

“At this stage we’re looking at a storm near that south-west corner late afternoon to early evening and it’s gradually going to move north and east through the evening,” she said.

“The metropolitan area should start receiving it as we come into the early part of the night, but probably three hours each side of our local time 10:00pm we can expect it to impact around about Perth,” he said.

“And, then through the night or continue right along the southern coast just wreaking havoc all through the night.”

The SES is advising people to stay away from downed power lines, fallen trees and debris from the previous storm.

It also is warning of the risk of flooded rivers and streams.

Mr Gale says people should ensure items around their home are secure.

“Most importantly people need to get indoors stay out of the conditions with their pets,” he said.

The RSPCA is urging pet owners to ensure their animals are safe.

The organisation has received several reports of lost and found animals following stormy weather which has flattened many fences.

In previous years, pets have injured themselves by running onto roads and panicking because of loud thunderstorms.

Almost 50 schools in Perth, the South West and the Wheatbelt have been closed.

The Education Department says schools will not open tomorrow if they are damaged or lose power or water.

As a final note to this:

There is NO NEED for any resources extraction at all in Australia or other nearby lands, underwater sealands and islands.
Human greed, centred in places of piggery such as New York City, London, Moscow and Peking, is primarily responsible for the harassment, intimidation, assaults, attacks, abductions and extreme terrorism and violence being inflicted upon the wilderness in Australia and related areas.
Nature will eventually say “Enough is Enough” and there will be NO MORE.

The Olympic Dam mine expansion will spark earthquakes up to 6.0 in magnitude in the surrounding region US geologist Edward Cranswick says.

In an advertisement in The Advertiser today, Mr. Cranswick says mining has caused hundreds of earthquakes across Australia.

Mr. Cranswick, who worked as a geophysicist for the US Geological Survey for 22 years, said the Olympic Dam project might cause a magnitude 4.0 or 6.0 quake. That would cause damage to tailing dams and regional communities if it struck in the wrong place, he said.

“The problem about Olympic Dam is that it’s the biggest engineering feat of its sort ever done, so it’s going to produce the biggest stresses,” he said.

A department of the Premier and Cabinet spokesman said the “redistribution of stresses” could “trigger small seismic events” but this was unlikely to lead to any impact on the community.

IMPORTANT NOTE: on the very morning this article and advertisement appeared in The Advertiser, a Richter 3.3 magnitude earthquake shook the Adelaide area at 2:22 a.m. An early edition of the same newspaper had additional information about uranium mining and its relation to earthquakes on page 33 but this was “conveniently” removed from the paper for the final edition.